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Tuesday, January 3, 2017

Exactly so. This lady does not know what she is saying. She is the poster child of bigotry.

She wants to preserve her tribal traditions, but lectures others about bigotry, hope, progress, and change.

Surely, she is not a change agent for bigotry. Very confused person!

Jiten Roy

From: "Dristy Pat dristypat5@gmail.com [mukto-mona]" <mukto-mona@yahoogroups.com>To: mukto-mona@yahoogroups.com Sent: Tuesday, January 3, 2017 7:19 PMSubject: Re: [mukto-mona] Ilhan Omar made history when she was elected the first Somali-American lawmaker in the U.S.

"I find hope," she says, "in knowing that I belong to a state that has a lot of people who are champions of change and progress; that we will rise up and fight for justice and equality; that ultimately love will trump hate."

In my view, above statements tells all. she praises people of Minnesota, who elected her, as champions of change and progress. Then, she ask her people to rise up and fight for justice and equality. Looks contradictory to me.

I think, she is saying that people of this country has problem of acceptance and they need to change and progress, but her community has nothing to change and progress; they are just right, so only they need to fight for their rights.

What kind of change and progress she is talking about, when she could not even change her own traditional garments.

Also, she should know from her past experiences in her beloved Somalia, which she had to flee, what bigotry means. So much for her own life-experiences. Now, she wants her Somalian community to fight for establishing their rights to make part of Minnesota as great mini-Somalia.

Wonderful community leader, isn't it? Bright prospect is awaiting for all young Somalians under her leadership.

On Nov. 8, Ilhan Omar made history when she was elected the first Somali-American lawmaker in the U.S.

"My election win offers a counter-narrative to the bigotry in the world," Minnesota State Representative-elect Omar, 34, says in the new issue of PEOPLE. "This is a land of immigrants, and most come here for opportunity, a second chance. It's our time to fight for the America we know we can have."

Omar herself is an immigrant, having fled her civil war-torn home country of Somalia as a child.

"The war started when I was 8," says Omar, who recalls witnessing the terrors of conflict. "One night militia tried to break into our home, and the exterior was riddled with bullets. My family left our neighborhood, passing through dead bodies and debris."

Not long after, Omar says she and her family left their home and relocated to a refugee camp in neighboring Kenya.

"I no longer had a bed of my own, the privacy of a shower in my own bathroom — we were essentially homeless," Omar says. "I would fetch water, and my family would reward me with a shilling at the end of the day, so I would go see a movie in the village next door in a makeshift theater: a hut."

After four years years in that Mombasa refugee camp, Omar and her family were sponsored to move to the United States, arriving in New York before moving to Arlington, Virginia, where Omar, then 12, began middle school.

" had missed years of education, so I didn't really speak English," Omar says. "My sisters and I learned by practice, watching TV with the captions on, reading and trying to repeat words back to each other."

After two and a half years, the family moved once again, this time to Minneapolis, where Omar faced another difficult adjustment: high school.

"Not a lot of the kids knew how to coexist with people of a different background, so we created a unity and diversity program," Omar says. "We'd have meals together and connect through experiences and stories. I was finally just 'Ilhan,' not 'that Somali girl.'"

For more on Ilhan Omar, pick up the new issue of PEOPLE, on newsstands everywhere now.

That United Nations-esque group in high school laid the groundwork for Omar's future in community organizing and politics, which she continued to nurture by studying political science and international policies at North Dakota State University.

"I believe women and minorities often wait for permission to be invited to something; we need to stop doing that," says Omar, who managed a 2013 city council race and was hired on to work at city hall in Minneapolis before getting elected by Minnesota's District 60B in 2016.

While she's always been passionate about politics, Omar's fervor has only been compounded since becoming a mother.

"My kids are the reason I continue to strive for something better," she says of her children with husband Ahmed Hirsi: son Adnan, 11, and daughters Ilwad, 4, and Isra, 13. "They know, as kids who are Muslim, Somali, black Americans, that they've always been part of a struggle and that change isn't easy."

Even so, Omar hopes to use her new statehouse position to make a change. And despite the turbulent political year leading up to President-elect Donald Trump's election in November, Omar remains hopeful.

"I find hope," she says, "in knowing that I belong to a state that has a lot of people who are champions of change and progress; that we will rise up and fight for justice and equality; that ultimately love will trump hate."

"I find hope," she says, "in knowing that I belong to a state that has a lot of people who are champions of change and progress; that we will rise up and fight for justice and equality; that ultimately love will trump hate."

In my view, above statements tells all. she praises people of Minnesota, who elected her, as champions of change and progress. Then, she ask her people to rise up and fight for justice and equality. Looks contradictory to me.

I think, she is saying that people of this country has problem of acceptance and they need to change and progress, but her community has nothing to change and progress; they are just right, so only they need to fight for their rights.

What kind of change and progress she is talking about, when she could not even change her own traditional garments.

Also, she should know from her past experiences in her beloved Somalia, which she had to flee, what bigotry means. So much for her own life-experiences. Now, she wants her Somalian community to fight for establishing their rights to make part of Minnesota as great mini-Somalia.

Wonderful community leader, isn't it? Bright prospect is awaiting for all young Somalians under her leadership.

On Nov. 8, Ilhan Omar made history when she was elected the first Somali-American lawmaker in the U.S.

"My election win offers a counter-narrative to the bigotry in the world," Minnesota State Representative-elect Omar, 34, says in the new issue of PEOPLE. "This is a land of immigrants, and most come here for opportunity, a second chance. It's our time to fight for the America we know we can have."

Omar herself is an immigrant, having fled her civil war-torn home country of Somalia as a child.

"The war started when I was 8," says Omar, who recalls witnessing the terrors of conflict. "One night militia tried to break into our home, and the exterior was riddled with bullets. My family left our neighborhood, passing through dead bodies and debris."

Not long after, Omar says she and her family left their home and relocated to a refugee camp in neighboring Kenya.

"I no longer had a bed of my own, the privacy of a shower in my own bathroom — we were essentially homeless," Omar says. "I would fetch water, and my family would reward me with a shilling at the end of the day, so I would go see a movie in the village next door in a makeshift theater: a hut."

After four years years in that Mombasa refugee camp, Omar and her family were sponsored to move to the United States, arriving in New York before moving to Arlington, Virginia, where Omar, then 12, began middle school.

" had missed years of education, so I didn't really speak English," Omar says. "My sisters and I learned by practice, watching TV with the captions on, reading and trying to repeat words back to each other."

After two and a half years, the family moved once again, this time to Minneapolis, where Omar faced another difficult adjustment: high school.

"Not a lot of the kids knew how to coexist with people of a different background, so we created a unity and diversity program," Omar says. "We'd have meals together and connect through experiences and stories. I was finally just 'Ilhan,' not 'that Somali girl.'"

For more on Ilhan Omar, pick up the new issue of PEOPLE, on newsstands everywhere now.

That United Nations-esque group in high school laid the groundwork for Omar's future in community organizing and politics, which she continued to nurture by studying political science and international policies at North Dakota State University.

"I believe women and minorities often wait for permission to be invited to something; we need to stop doing that," says Omar, who managed a 2013 city council race and was hired on to work at city hall in Minneapolis before getting elected by Minnesota's District 60B in 2016.

While she's always been passionate about politics, Omar's fervor has only been compounded since becoming a mother.

"My kids are the reason I continue to strive for something better," she says of her children with husband Ahmed Hirsi: son Adnan, 11, and daughters Ilwad, 4, and Isra, 13. "They know, as kids who are Muslim, Somali, black Americans, that they've always been part of a struggle and that change isn't easy."

Even so, Omar hopes to use her new statehouse position to make a change. And despite the turbulent political year leading up to President-elect Donald Trump's election in November, Omar remains hopeful.

"I find hope," she says, "in knowing that I belong to a state that has a lot of people who are champions of change and progress; that we will rise up and fight for justice and equality; that ultimately love will trump hate."

Comments (2982)

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Posted by: Dristy Pat <dristypat5@gmail.com>

**************************************************** Mukto Mona plans for a Grand Darwin Day Celebration: Call For Articles:

On Nov. 8, Ilhan Omar made history when she was elected the first Somali-American lawmaker in the U.S.

"My election win offers a counter-narrative to the bigotry in the world," Minnesota State Representative-elect Omar, 34, says in the new issue of PEOPLE. "This is a land of immigrants, and most come here for opportunity, a second chance. It's our time to fight for the America we know we can have."

Omar herself is an immigrant, having fled her civil war-torn home country of Somalia as a child.

"The war started when I was 8," says Omar, who recalls witnessing the terrors of conflict. "One night militia tried to break into our home, and the exterior was riddled with bullets. My family left our neighborhood, passing through dead bodies and debris."

Not long after, Omar says she and her family left their home and relocated to a refugee camp in neighboring Kenya.

"I no longer had a bed of my own, the privacy of a shower in my own bathroom — we were essentially homeless," Omar says. "I would fetch water, and my family would reward me with a shilling at the end of the day, so I would go see a movie in the village next door in a makeshift theater: a hut."

After four years years in that Mombasa refugee camp, Omar and her family were sponsored to move to the United States, arriving in New York before moving to Arlington, Virginia, where Omar, then 12, began middle school.

" had missed years of education, so I didn't really speak English," Omar says. "My sisters and I learned by practice, watching TV with the captions on, reading and trying to repeat words back to each other."

After two and a half years, the family moved once again, this time to Minneapolis, where Omar faced another difficult adjustment: high school.

"Not a lot of the kids knew how to coexist with people of a different background, so we created a unity and diversity program," Omar says. "We'd have meals together and connect through experiences and stories. I was finally just 'Ilhan,' not 'that Somali girl.'"

For more on Ilhan Omar, pick up the new issue of PEOPLE, on newsstands everywhere now.

That United Nations-esque group in high school laid the groundwork for Omar's future in community organizing and politics, which she continued to nurture by studying political science and international policies at North Dakota State University.

"I believe women and minorities often wait for permission to be invited to something; we need to stop doing that," says Omar, who managed a 2013 city council race and was hired on to work at city hall in Minneapolis before getting elected by Minnesota's District 60B in 2016.

While she's always been passionate about politics, Omar's fervor has only been compounded since becoming a mother.

"My kids are the reason I continue to strive for something better," she says of her children with husband Ahmed Hirsi: son Adnan, 11, and daughters Ilwad, 4, and Isra, 13. "They know, as kids who are Muslim, Somali, black Americans, that they've always been part of a struggle and that change isn't easy."

Even so, Omar hopes to use her new statehouse position to make a change. And despite the turbulent political year leading up to President-elect Donald Trump's election in November, Omar remains hopeful.

"I find hope," she says, "in knowing that I belong to a state that has a lot of people who are champions of change and progress; that we will rise up and fight for justice and equality; that ultimately love will trump hate."

Comments (2982)

__._,_.___

Posted by: Jiten Roy <jnrsr53@yahoo.com>

**************************************************** Mukto Mona plans for a Grand Darwin Day Celebration: Call For Articles:

Your resolutions are for the status quo, while Americans Republic just voted out the status quo candidate, and opted for a change. It seems like, you are walking backward…. Watch out for the road bumps.

Our Task In 2017: Be Better Americans Than The Incoming President

It's tough. We like our presidents admirable. We like them smart and shiny, with verifiable resumes, successful academic careers, a lack of ongoing lawsuits, demonstrably adult speech patterns, and character traits like integrity, honesty, intelligence and political gravitas.

We've had a few of those. We've also had a few who were less so — less shiny, less honest; occasionally less elected (Bush v. Gore still rankles). But even in those lesser cases there was still the sheen of presidential distinction and stateliness; still the expected standards of respect, decorum, and good manners (even when spun homey by Carter, Bush or Clinton); still the aura of loftiness surrounding not only the office, but the man (yes, still just the man) who held the office.

Then Election 2016 happened.

On Wednesday, November 9, 2016, over half the country woke to the realization that America and its noble assignation of "President of the United States" had been crassly modified — dumbed-down, diminished, slapped with cheap faux gilt and the bluster of mob mentality. With a hearty blend of lies and innuendo, hackery and foreign intervention, ingrained and relentless sexism, and the low-bar appeal of Trump's thuggish vision of "greatness," the painful blink of an electoral college eye dismissed the popular vote winner (by almost three million) to award our "country 'tis of thee" to a reality-show huckster best known for grabbing women's private parts, tap-dancing past the tax collector, stiffing his students and small biz vendors, and firing hapless B-list celebrities on air.

Heads exploded worldwide as we'd ushered in the "champagne wishes and caviar dreams" of a Donald J. Trump America.

Dramatic, perhaps, but sometimes life actually is as histrionic as purple prose. It allows inane plot twists to proceed despite their being unhinged and unimaginable; it follows story arcs that so clearly lack foundation, sense or substance that we can't believe where the damn things are going or that we're actually being taken there against our will.

But while we liberals, progressives, and other left-leaning folk were busy pulse-checking Nate Silver and following Rachel Maddow like frantic groupies, convinced the sheer lunacy and daily drip of disqualifying factors surrounding the GOP candidate were sure to keep him from the White House, the poison of a campaign corrupted by myriad influences, including our former Cold War opponents, had already been administered; we just didn't know until it was too late for the antidote.

So now we stand with our families, our children, the huddled masses yearning to breathe free, and the question becomes: WHAT DO WE DO ABOUT IT?

We want to look away, ignore the insanity; shut the spigot of endless sensationalism, the idiotic prattling, the tedious, terrifying political posturing, to simply get on with our lives, rebuild our sense of civic stability; focus on the positive activism of people of conscience and compassion. But we can't look away; we can't afford to ignore the large, lumbering elephant soon to be sitting in the middle of the Oval Office. In fact, we must not only keep paying attention; we must keep paying attention with vigilance.

I see the daily posts of outraged citizens, politicians, pundits, cable talkshow hosts, opinion writers, and investigative journalists, all sharing and shouting not only about the latest malfeasance, but asking why NOTHING IS BEING DONE ABOUT IT. How many times have you heard someone remark: "If Hillary Clinton, Bill Clinton, or — fill in the blank with any name you can possibly think of — did that, they'd be impeached, arrested, banished, imprisoned, drawn and quartered; charged with treason, but NOTHING HAPPENS TO DONALD TRUMP... WHY?" It's a fair question which I, too, would like answered.

Because how we can teach our children, our growing teens and young adults, to become civically active, to aspire to greatness and reach for the highest ideals, while daily they're bombarded by the murk and corruption of our incoming leadership?

WE CAN'T. Because we will not have that kind of leadership after January 20th. The moment Trump is sworn into office we will lose the perk of having a president, a leader, a representative who is admirable, sharp, dignified, and inspiring. We will, instead, have a man in the Oval Office who is generally the opposite of what we want our children, our teens, our young adults — hell, our damn peers — to aspire to. And while that is a tragic and dispiriting legacy of Election 2016, we are each and every one of us capable of transcending and resisting it. How?

By being better Americans than the incoming president:

By being better people, better leaders; better teachers, mentors, inspirers, and creators, embodying exactly the kind of people we want our children to be.

By being industry leaders and innovators who conduct business with respect, integrity, and unassailable ethics.

By opening our minds and hearts to learn and absorb new facts and verified truths — not propaganda, not biased misinformation — about people, cultures, ethnicities, religions, and orientations that are "different" and unfamiliar.

By extending the compassion and understanding garnered from the above to treat people better, to seek new ways to help, find effective steps toward tangible solutions.

By shaking off fixed notions about what sexism is, gaining greater understanding of how it pervades and influences; adjusting our thinking to realize and implement respectful, honorable, and gender-equality behaviors and attitudes towards women.

By teaching and exemplifying decorous, respectful, civil, and productive discussion skills, for both virtual and tangible conversation and debate. Trollism has had a deleterious effect on our culture and, unfortunately, the new president is the King of Trolls. Let's change the trend and raise the bar.

By realizing that "politically correct" actually means being sensitive and aware of evolving culture, mores, ideas, and attitudes, and adjusting according. That rejecting the notion of "politically correct" is most often the tool of those who traffick in bigotry, hate, racism, sexism, trollism, and verbal abuse.

By understanding that loyalty and patriotism do not require blind acceptance of the words, actions, and policies of any one person, including the new president, nor do they preempt one's right to free speech and civil liberty. They do, however, suggest one not aggrandize the dictator of an antagonistic foreign government over one's own.

And, lastly, and in an umbrella overview: by acknowledging and staying vigilant to the new president's long and growing list of negatives, using those as bullet-points of what not to be, do, and emulate. That almost makes it easy, doesn't it?

We are a deeply divided country, but there is nothing new in that. We've been divided from the moment the Mayflower landed and Manifest Destiny pushed some to destroy our native population while others fought for peaceful coexistence; since brothers fought brothers in the Civil War; since World War II convinced some Americans to imprison our Japanese citizens; since the civil rights era made our racial sin a bloody and still-unhealed tear; since Vietnam made us realize not all wars were justified; since Watergate made clear our presidents could be criminals, and since 9/11 gave us a new kind of fear that metastasized into ethnic bigotry and xenophobia.

We have also survived, evolved, and grown. Marriage equality was achieved, healthcare was passed; new environmental measures were implemented. Harriet Tubman got the $20 bill, unemployment hit a new low, and enough women of color were elected on November 8th to make history. We can cross our fingers and hope the new administration doesn't destroy all that forward progress and more, or we can embrace, like it's a mission from God, the task of maintaining and raising the level of integrity, ethics, and honor in our lives and in this country, despite having leadership bereft of those qualities.

The beginning of a new year — the ending of what was and the dawning of what will be — seems a perfect time for such pledges. So let's do it. Let's take the task on: no matter what happens with the day-to-day drama of our impertinent, impermanent new occupant of the White House, let's be the kind of Americans we want to be, need to be, to keep our country, our citizens, our "brand" of progress and compassion moving forward.